App Model evolution

Description

The App Model for any OS includes everything in the app lifecycle from packaging and deployment to background execution to communication/sharing to the notification system and finally uninstalling the app Andrew will cover how the app model is evolving with Project Rome to encompass the Microsoft Graph to address a broader multi-device ecosystem and how it can apply to you.

The click thing was annoying, but I had no trouble listening to him, I thought he spoken quite well actually.

The one area of the presentation I think that could be improved is why win32 developers should use the desktop converter tool. He said it would make the apps better, but put less emphasis on how. Giving Win10 S as the main reason to port is unlikely to be a compelling reason until Ms shows that Win10 S devices can do big numbers.

You said when answering a question that system elevated capabilities are likely not to be included in the app model, but do you mean the store or actually the app model is correct? I've seen some uwp with system capabilities (register editor for instance) being distributed, how do they work them?